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An anxious-looking family shelter in their tent in Kibati. © UNHCR/P.Taggart |
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Press release
2008-11-21
Tension mounts in two Congolese camps after woman shot dead
UNHCR is increasingly concerned about the safety of tens of thousands
of displaced Congolese civilians in the Kibati camps in the outskirts of
Goma, the capital of the troubled province of North Kivu in the Democratic
Republic of the Congo. In an alarming incident in the early hours of this
morning (Friday), a 20-year old woman was shot and killed at the Kibati
camp and a number of families were forced to leave their huts, which were
then looted by armed men. Our team in Kibati is assessing the situation
and the needs of the victims.
Over the past weeks we have repeatedly expressed our concern for the safety
of some 67,000 internally displaced Congolese civilians sheltered in the
Kibati camps. We fear that the civilian population, already in a dramatic
and desperate humanitarian situation, could be caught in the crossfire,
should fighting resume in the area.
The latest incident adds to the pressure on UNHCR and the provincial authorities
to move almost half of the 67,000 internally displaced people (IDPs) currently
staying in two camps in Kibati to the new Mugunga III camp, located to
the west of Goma.
We, together with our partners, have been taking advantage of relative
calm in North Kivu this week to step up work on a new camp for up to 30,000
displaced people.
This lull has enabled UNHCR and partners to mark out the 65-hectare Mugunga
III site, clear the ground and start building accommodation blocks and
most urgent infrastructure, including reception and shelter facilities,
access roads and latrines. A water distribution system is being built,
with six standpipes now in operation to supply up to 10,000 people.
The work conditions are extremely difficult at the planned site as it
lies on a hardened lava rock field and digging of sanitation pits and levelling
of access roads is taking time.
We plan to start the relocation of internally displaced people from Kibati
to Mugunga III as soon as the basic conditions are in place. UNHCR will
help the provincial authorities move people on a voluntary basis from the
two Kibati camps to Mugunga III. Most people will make the 15-kilometre
journey by foot, but young children, the elderly and the infirm will be
transported by truck. For those who will make the journey on foot, we are
also working on the construction of several way stations between the two
sites where people will be able to rest and refresh before moving on again
towards Mugunga III.
Meanwhile, we are bringing in additional aid to North Kivu. Six UNHCR
trucks with trailers - loaded with humanitarian assistance - arrived on
Wednesday from UNHCR’s regional emergency stockpile in Ngara, Tanzania.
The convoy brought in 2,425 pieces of plastic sheeting, 1,204 kitchen sets,
18,444 high thermal blankets, 13,750 sleeping mats, 4, 200 collapsible
10 litre water jerry cans and 15,000 mosquito nets. The next shipment of
humanitarian assistance will also include more than 13,000 blankets and
over 600 rolls of plastic sheeting needed for shelter construction
Fighting in North Kivu intensified at the end of 2006. By January 2008, it
had brought the total number of IDPs in the region to more than 800,000.
Since the fighting resumed in August, some 250,000 civilians have fled, many
of them already displaced. In addition, an estimated 12,000 Congolese refugees
have crossed the border into Uganda. |
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